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Bill Blass Profile

William (Bill) Ralph Blass (1922-2002) was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA in 1922. His father ran the local hardware store, but died when Bill was only 5 years old. He started sketching when very young, copying the dresses he saw in the movies and in magazines. After completing high school, he started sending his designs to companies in New York, and sold several.

In 1939, when he was 17, he left the Midwest and went to New York, and started studying fashion design at Parsons School of Design. On graduation he worked as a sketcher for David Crystal, a Sportswear manufacturer, before being drafted for military service. In 1945, after the war ended, he moved to Anna Miller and Cio., as a designer. Mrs Miller retired in 1959 and by that time Bill Blass was her chief designer. Her company was merged with that of her brother Maurice Rentner.

His designs were very successful, and the company began to be more and more in his image. In 1970 he bought the company and it became Bill Blass Ltd.

Blass designed for a host of famous women, including first ladies Nancy Reagon and Barbara Bush as well as Candice Bergen, Barbra Streisand and Barbara Walters.

Bill Blass was best known as a designer of American daywear. He took traditional garments such as jackets and softened the lines, creating a more fluid, less severe design. His suits were tailored by curves to imitate the female body. Even his most structured garments were softened by gentle bends at the hem, lapels or fastenings.

Blass was inventive in his mixing of textures and patterns. He used tweeds and shirtings, often with a splash of colour, or a bright frill of lace or fur trim. His use of ruffles has been particularly effective.

Bill Blass is often referred to as the "Dean of American Designers". For around 50 years he designed clothes to meet standards of country club and evoke Hollywood glamour simultaneously. He believed a designer should not be a dictator and the client must ultimately be in charge. He traveled all over the US making sure his clothes always work well.

Today young designers create the clothes that he was so famous for. In 1976 Jacques Tiffeau joined Bill Blass. Several other designers have trained with him. In 2000 it was Steven Slowick and Lars Nilsson has taken over in 2001. Click Lars Nilsson for full details.

In the year 2000, the city of New York decided to honour American fashion designers by placing bronze plaques along 7th Avenue, the great street of fashion in New York. This has been called the "FASHION WALK OF FAME." Bill Blass was one of those honoured, and here is a picture of his plaque.

On June 12th, 2002, Bill Blass died at his home in Washington, Connecticut, USA, at the age of 79. In his last weeks, he was working on a Retrospective of his work, planned for Fall 2003.

Spring/Summer 2003

  • Lars Nilsson showed the Spring/Summer 2003 Ready-to-Wear collection for the house of Bill Blass at the New York Fashion Week in September 2002, which was greeted with aclaim. This was the first collection after the death of founder Bill Blass. This dress is from that collection.

Spring/Summer 2004

  • Michael Vollbracht's collection for this season for the house of Bill Blass, was shown during New York Fashion Week in September 2003. Several other models from the past joined the show, such as Karen Bjornsen and Diane Dewitt, from the 1970's and 1980's.
  • They paraded a range of Blass classics since it is Vollbracht's mission to retain Blass's fabled faithful customers, while also bringing in a new generation of younger ladies. He has trunk shows lined up in Chicago, Palm Beach and Houston so that the collection can be shown to the loyalist camps around the country. This collection had so many familiar Blass touches that the clientele sighed with relief.

Fall/Winter 2004

  • The Fall collection was shown during New York Fashion Week in February 2004. This was Michael Vollbracht's second Blass collection and he showed his devotion to the house's reputation for elegant sportswear. He used some of Bill Blass's legendary models and presented almost 80 outfits. Vollbracht scored with a younger clientele as well as the older woman still attached to the Blass heritage by showing a range of suits and dresses in fabulous fabrics.

Spring/Summer 2005

  • During New York Fashion Week in September 2004, Michael Vollbracht presented his third collection for the house of Bill Blass.
  • It was a faster show than usual, and the clothes had a trimmer silhouette, showing a little more flesh. Michael's lacy sundress were very pretty, as were sexy bra-topped gowns. He is still a little careful, and could be more extravagant as Bill's clothes always were.

Perfumes

  • 1970 - Bill Blass (W)
  • 1978 - Bill Blass (M)
  • 1978 - Blass Woman
  • 1990 - Nude
  • 1991 - Basic Black (W)
  • 1991 - Hot
  • 1999 - Amazing (W)
  • 2000 - Amazing (M)
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